| Literature DB >> 36123090 |
Knud Ryom1, Anne-Sofie Hargaard2, Paulina Sander Melby3, Helle Terkildsen Maindal2,3, Peter Bentsen4, Nikos Ntoumanis5,6, Stephanie Schoeppe7, Glen Nielsen8,9, Peter Elsborg3,4,9.
Abstract
Physical literacy (PL) is a comprehensive concept covering motivation, confidence, physical competence, knowledge and understanding of individuals' physical activity throughout life. PL has three overlapping domains, such as: an affective, a physical and a cognitive domain. So far, PL has not been measured in the adults and no complete measurement has been developed to date.Entities:
Keywords: PUBLIC HEALTH; QUALITATIVE RESEARCH; SPORTS MEDICINE
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36123090 PMCID: PMC9486222 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-058351
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 3.006
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram showing the process of study identification and selection. PRISMA, Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses.
Instrument overview: physical domain
| Instrument and authors | Tool description: Target group, Items and Scales | Construct(s) assessed | Validation | Overall strengths | Limitations |
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| Physical Self Inventory-version b (PSI6-b). | Target group is the general population. The PSI6-b has six items and six subscales. | The scale assesses global self-esteem, physical self-worth, physical condition, sport competence, physical strength and attractive body. | Studies have found that PSI6-b had acceptable psychometric properties and external validity (Ninot | Strong validity based on the PSI-6. | Non-conventional validation methods used in validating PSI6-b compared with PSI-6. More studies needed. |
| The sports competence subscale of the Physical Self-Perception Profile. | Target group is the general population. The measurement consisted of six items and one scale. | The tool assesses perception of competence for sport. | The tool has been found to have adequate internal consistency (Levy and Readdy, 2009). | Studies report good validity (Levy and Readdy, 2009). | May not capture all dimensions of important basic movement skills relevant for PL. |
| Self-reported physical fitness (SRFit) survey. | Target group is the general population. The SRFit has 22 items divided on six subscales. | The measurement assesses health related fitness level across health-domains included in the survey. | SRFit has been found to have a good reliability and construct and concurrent validity (Keith | Initial evaluation supports the SRFit survey’s validity and reliability. | Instrument created for 40+ adults. |
| Rasch assessment of everyday activity limitations (REAL) item bank. | Target group is people with disabilities, however is also used in the wider population. The REAL consists of 47 items. | The purpose of the item bank is to assess disability in complex activities in daily living. | The REAL content validity has been supported (Oude Voshaar | A newly developed item bank for measuring complex activities of daily living. | Time consuming. |
PL, physical literacy.
Instrument overview: knowledge domain
| Instrument and authors | Tool description: target group, Items and Scales | Construct(s) assessed | Validation | Overall strengths | Limitations |
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| Level of knowledge of physical activity for health (adapted from Chapman’s questionnaire of levels of smoking knowledge). | Target group is the general population. 11 items/question divided in four subscales/levels. | The measure assesses the individual’s level of knowledge concerning physical activity. The four levels assessed include: (1) knowing that physical activity is beneficial for health and physical inactivity is harmful to health; (2) knowing that specific health conditions are related to physical inactivity; (3) knowing exactly how much physical activity is needed for health and (4) the probabilities of developing | Not validated. | Relative new measurement, more research need. | No validation studies exist. |
| Understanding Contemplators’ Knowledge and Awareness of the Physical Activity Guidelines. | Target group is the general population. Seven items. | The measure assesses knowledge of health benefits from physical activity and knowledge of physical activity dosage recommendations. | Not validated. | Relative new measurement, more research need. | No validation studies exist. |
Instrument overview: affective domain (motivation)
| Affective domain: motivation | |||||
| Instrument and authors | Tool description: target group, Iitems and scales | Construct(s) assessed | Validation | Overall strengths | Limitations |
| The Exercise Motivations Inventory (EMI-2) and the Exercise Motives and Gains Inventory. | Target group is the whole population. The EMI-2 comprises 14 subscales and 56 items. | Motivation to exercise based on Deci and Ryan’s | The factorial validity and invariance of the factor structure across gender were rigorously tested using confirmatory factor analytic procedures (Markland and Ingledew, 1997). | Strong validation results. | EMI-2 is not theory driven. |
| Motivation for Physical Activity Measure (MPAM-R). | Target group is the general population. The measurement consists of 30 items shared among five motivation subscales: interest/ enjoyment motivation; competence motivation; appearance motivation; fitness motivation and social motivation. | The tool assesses participants’ motivation for sport and exercise activities. | Studies support that the MPAM-R is both valid and reliable measurement (Ryan | The measurement has been shown to predict various behavioural outcomes (eg, attendance‚ persistence or maintained participation‚ and to predict mental health and well-being). | Problems with cross-cultural adaptations. |
| Kerner and Grossmans intention to exercise scale: Four scales that measure the exercise behaviour of individuals. | Target group is the general population. The measurement consists of 4 subscales with 40 items in total: fitness attitude scale (19 items); expectations of others scale (seven items); perceived behavioural control scale (three items) and intention to exercise scale (11 items). | The measurement predicts participation in physical activity and measures the different independent variables from the theory of planned behaviour model (Ajzen, 1985). | Studies support that the four scales have content validity and reliability. (Kerner and Grossman, 2001). | Preliminary content validity and good scale reliability. | Small scale pilot study. |
| Behavioural Regulation in Exercise Questionnaire-2 (BREQ-2). | Target group is the general population. The measurement consists of 19 items and 5 subscales: amotivation; 3 types of extrinsic motivation (external regulation; introjected regulation; identified regulation) and intrinsic motivation. | BREQ-2 assesses the level of self-determined motivation for the exercise activity in question. | Studies have supported the factorial and construct validity of BREQ-2. | Adds the dimension of amotivation to BREQ. | Amotivation assessment in BREQ-2 has been criticised (Liu |
| BREQ-3 | Target group is the general population. BREQ-3 consists of 24 items and 6 subscales, adding integrated regulation to BREQ-2. | The tool assesses the six types of motivation in self-determination theory as well as amotivation. | The BREQ-3 has been found to be a valid and a reliable measurement instrument to measure behaviour regulations, stemming from self-determination theory, in the exercise domain. | BREQ-3 is a valid and reliable measurement of behaviour regulation underlying Self-determination theory in the exercise domain. | It has been suggested that it is difficult to translate some of the items to different language and cultural contexts directly (Cid |
| Sports Motivation Scale (SMS-6): Revised six-factor sports motivation scale. | Target group are athletes’ motivation toward sport participation. SMS-6 consists of 24 items and six subscales, stemming from self-determination theory (Deci and Ryan, 1985). | The SMS-6 is a measure of contextual motivation that is intended to identify the perceived reasons for participating in sport. | Items measuring self-determining forms of extrinsic motivation have been found to possess satisfactory levels of construct validity. Moreover, it has been found that integrated regulation significantly and positively correlated with various aspects of flow (eg, autotelic experience, sense of control) (Mallett | SMS-6 is preferable to the original SMS. | It measures motivation for sport, which make it less inclusive in term of general PA. |
| The Behavioural Regulation in Sport Questionnaire (BRSQ). | Target group are elite and nonelite athlete populations (competitive). Consists of 7 subscales and 36 items. | Measures intrinsic motivation, four types of extrinsic motivation and amotivation (self-determination theory; Deci and Ryan, 1985). | BRSQ has shown good reliability and validity in elite and nonelite athlete populations. The test–retest reliability of the scores has been found acceptable. The factorial validity of the BRSQ scores has also been generally supported. The majority of the evidence also supports the nomological validity of the scores. (Lonsdale | Strong reliability and validity. | Developed for competitive sports. |
| Basic Psychological Needs in Exercise Scale (BPNES). | Target group is the general population. The BPNSE is an 18-item scale with three subscales. | Satisfaction/fulfilment of the three basic psychological needs during exercise | BPNES has shown satisfactory internal reliability coefficients, and evidence for the factor concurrent, discriminant and nomological validity of the translated scale. Cross-cultural validity analyses supported configural invariance and partial metric, partial strong, and partial strict factorial invariance of the BPNES responses (Vlachopoulos | Cross-cultural validated. | Possible gender measurement non-invariance. |
| Self-Motivation Inventory (SMI-10). | Target group are elderly participants. SMI-10 is a 10- item short version of the original SMS (40 items). | Measures participants’ self-motivation for exercise adherence. | The SMI-10 shows acceptable internal consistency reliability, similar to the original SMI-40 score. (Andre and Dishman, 2012). | Predicts drop-out from exercise. | Mostly used among elders. |
| Sports Motivation Scale (SMS-II). | Target groups are sport participants. SMS-II consists of 18 items and six subscales. | The tool assesses the level of motivation towards sport, using the self-determination theory framework (Deci and Ryan, 1985). | Studies have found a good factor structure and adequate convergent validity. Furthermore, the construct validity has been supported (Pelletier | Stronger measurement than SMS. | Needs more research on test–retest reliability. |
Instrument overview: affective domain (confidence)
| Instrument and authors | Tool description: target group, Items and Scales | Construct(s) assessed | Validation | Overall strengths | Limitations |
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| Self-efficacy scales for health-related exercise and dietary behaviours. | Target group is the general population. The measurement consists of two exercise self-efficacy subscales and five dietary self-efficacy subscales. 61 items. | Self-efficacy scales are assessed with respect to reported diet and exercise behaviours. | The self-efficacy scales for eating and exercise behaviours have been found to show preliminary evidence of being reliable and valid (Sallis | Preliminary evidence of being reliable and valid. | Diverse populations have not been investigated. |
| Perceived Competence Scale (PCS). | Target group is the general population. 4 items, 1 scale; perceived competence. | The PCS assesses participants’ feelings of competence about different behaviours such as healthier behaviour or participating in a physical activity regularly. | PCS is one of the most valid measurement designed to assess self-efficacy. | Perceived competence has been assessed in various studies and used to predict maintained behaviour change. It is highly valid and reliable. | Based on Self-determination theory, as to why so some researchers suggest it difficult to use without SDT approaches (debatable). |
| Self-Efficacy for Exercise (SEE) Scale. | Target group is the general population. 9 items measuring one scale | This scale is a self-report of exercise self-efficacy. | The SEE has been found reliable and having good internal consistency. | Has strong validity and reliability. | Developed for older adults. |
| New General Self-Efficacy Scale. | Target group is the general population. Eight items. | Assesses how much people believe they can achieve their goals, despite difficulties. | The New General Self-Efficacy Scale has been found more reliable and valid than other self-efficacy measures (Scherbaum, Cohen-Charash and Kern, 2006). | Reported as reliable and valid (Scherbaum, Cohen-Charash and Kern, 2006). | More resilience oriented. |
| Multidimensional Outcome Expectations for Exercise Scale (MOEES). | Target group is the general population. 15 items and three subscales: physical, social and self-evaluative. Developed from the Exercise Self-Efficacy Scale, (McAuley, 1993). | MOEES is used to assess three related, but conceptually independent domains of outcome expectations for exercise. | MOEES has shown to be a reliable and valid measure of outcome expectations for exercise (McAuley | Draw from social cognitive theory. | Based on an interpersonal theory and including intrapersonal perspectives. |
PL, physical literacy.